FUEL FLOW DETECTION METHOD OF IN-VEHICLE ENGINE
20170089285 ยท 2017-03-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02D41/0027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2200/0414
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2200/501
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D19/027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D19/0628
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2200/0402
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/0025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D19/0647
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T10/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F02D2200/0406
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2200/101
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M21/0215
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/182
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02D41/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A fuel flow detection method of an in-vehicle engine uses gasoline, liquefied gas, and gas as a fuel and adopts a spark ignition system, and a fuel flow is calculated from a detected intake air flow and an air-fuel ratio after combustion or an oxygen ratio.
Claims
1. A fuel flow detection method of an in-vehicle engine that uses gasoline, liquefied gas, and gas as a fuel and adopts a spark ignition system, wherein a fuel flow is calculated from a detected intake air flow (Qa) and an air-fuel ratio (R) after combustion or an oxygen ratio (RO).
2. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 1, wherein an estimated intake air flow is calculated from information of an intake manifold pressure sensor provided on a downstream side of a throttle valve of an engine, information of an air temperature sensor, and information of an engine speed or estimated intake air flow information is calculated from information of a throttle valve opening, an atmospheric pressure, and an air temperature used as the intake air flow.
3. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 1, wherein the oxygen ratio includes an air-fuel ratio index and the fuel flow is calculated using the following formula:
Fuel flow(Qf)=the detected intake air flow(Qa)constant(K)/the oxygen ratio.
4. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 1, wherein the fuel flow (Qf) is set to 0, when an engine stop or a fuel supply stop is controlled.
5. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 1, wherein the fuel flow is detected by a control unit different from a control unit of the in-vehicle engine.
6. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 1, wherein fuel efficiency is calculated by dividing the fuel flow by a vehicle speed.
7. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 1, wherein an estimated intake air flow is calculated from information of an intake manifold pressure sensor provided on a downstream side of a throttle valve of an engine, information of an air temperature sensor, and information of an engine speed
8. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 1, wherein estimated intake air flow information is calculated from information of a throttle valve opening, an atmospheric pressure, and an air temperature used as the intake air flow.
7. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 2, wherein the oxygen ratio includes an air-fuel ratio index and the fuel flow is calculated using the following formula:
Fuel flow(Qf)=the detected intake air flow(Qa)constant(K)/the oxygen ratio.
8. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 2, wherein the fuel flow (Qf) is set to 0, when an engine stop or a fuel supply stop is controlled.
9. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 3, wherein the fuel flow (Qf) is set to 0, when an engine stop or a fuel supply stop is controlled.
10. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 2, wherein the fuel flow is detected by a control unit different from a control unit of the in-vehicle engine.
11. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 3, wherein the fuel flow is detected by a control unit different from a control unit of the in-vehicle engine.
12. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 4, wherein the fuel flow is detected by a control unit different from a control unit of the in-vehicle engine.
13. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 2, wherein fuel efficiency is calculated by dividing the fuel flow by a vehicle speed.
14. The fuel flow detection method of the in-vehicle engine according to claim 3, wherein fuel efficiency is calculated by dividing the fuel flow by a vehicle speed.
15. A method for fuel flow detection, the method comprising: providing an in-vehicle engine that uses gasoline, liquefied gas, and gas as a fuel; adopting a spark ignition system; and determining a fuel flow based on a detected intake air flow (Qa) and an air-fuel ratio (R) after combustion or an oxygen ratio (RO).
16. The method according to claim 15, a determination of an intake air flow being estimated utilizing information of an intake manifold pressure sensor provided on a downstream side of a throttle valve of an engine, information of an air temperature sensor, and information of an engine speed or utilizing information of a throttle valve opening, an atmospheric pressure, and an air temperature used as the intake air flow.
17. The method according to claim 15, the oxygen ratio including an air-fuel ratio index and calculating the fuel flow using the following formula:
Fuel flow(Qf)=the detected intake air flow(Qa)constant(K)/the oxygen ratio.
18. The method according to claim 15, setting the fuel flow (Qf) to 0, when controlling at least one of an engine stop and a fuel supply stop.
19. The method according to claim 15, detecting the fuel flow by a control unit different from a control unit of the in-vehicle engine.
20. The method according to claim 15, calculating fuel efficiency by dividing the fuel flow by a vehicle speed.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0018]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0027]
[0028] Here, air flow information detected to control the engine is used as the air flow (Qa). Specifically, estimated air flow information calculated from an engine speed calculated from an intake manifold pressure sensor 4 and a crank shaft rotation sensor 9 disposed on a downstream side of an intake throttle valve 2 and an intake temperature detected by a fuel temperature sensor 15 or estimated air flow information calculated from a throttle opening of the intake throttle valve 2, the engine speed, the intake temperature, and an atmospheric pressure is used.
[0029] In addition, the oxygen ratio (RO) is information showing an air-fuel ratio in a current engine operation state and is operated and calculated from a detection signal of an oxygen concentration sensor 16 attached to an engine exhaust pipe. In addition, in a system to which only an O.sub.2 sensor is attached, because only information of approximately a theoretical air-fuel ratio is known, information estimated as the theoretical air-fuel ratio may be executed when feedback control is executed.
[0030] When an excess air ratio is controlled to an enriched side and a lean side according to an operation situation, a sensor uses a value of the oxygen concentration sensor 16 at that time within a detection range of the sensor and handles control target air-fuel ratio in an ECU operation as estimated oxygen ratio information beyond the detection range of the sensor.
[0031] In the calculation formula of fuel flow (Qf)=air flow (Qa)/oxygen ratio (RO)K, K shows a conversion coefficient and is calculated as K=KafKe.
[0032] Here, Kaf shows a theoretical air-fuel ratio and is determined according to a used fuel. For example, Kaf is 14.7 in the case of gasoline and Kaf is 16.8 in the case of natural gas. In addition, Ke shows a correction coefficient and is a coefficient to absorb a deviation of a fuel flow calculated by estimation and an actual measurement value. The correction coefficient Ke is configured using a two-dimensional interpolation map such as engine speed information from the crank shaft rotation sensor 9 and load information of the pressure sensor 4 disposed in an intake manifold 3 and is set by an actual machine adaptation experiment.
[0033] In addition, because the fuel does not flow in a situation where the engine is stopped or the fuel is cut, processing of fuel flow (Qf)=0 is executed.
[0034] For the fuel flow (Qf) calculated by each processing, fuel efficiency (FE [kg/km]) can be calculated by dividing the fuel flow (Qf) by a vehicle speed (Vsd) like the processing according to the related art.
[0035]
[0036]
[0037] As the intake throttle valve 2 is opened and the engine 1 is accelerated, the air flow (Qa) increases, the oxygen concentration (OC) shows almost a constant value, and the fuel flow (Qf) estimated and calculated by the present invention shows almost the same change as a change in the air flow (Qa).
[0038] Then, the fuel flow (Qf) is changed almost equally to the air flow (Qa), by acceleration and deceleration. In addition, when the intake throttle valve 2 is returned to become a fuel cut state, the fuel flow (Qf) shows 0. Then, when rapid acceleration is performed and the air-fuel ratio is controlled to the enriched side, the fuel flow (Qf) also increases and the fuel flow (Qf) is detected in real time.
[0039] As described above, in the present invention, the fuel flow is calculated from the detected intake air flow (Qa) and the air-fuel ratio (R) after combustion or the oxygen ratio (RO), so that the fuel flow can be relatively easily calculated as compared with the method of calculating the fuel flow from the fuel injection time of the injector in the related art. In addition, disturbance and temporal deterioration of the injector can be prevented and the fuel flow and the fuel efficiency can be detected even in a system (for example, the gas mixer) not using the injector.
[0040] In addition, in the present invention, fuel efficiency information incorporated into an electronic control unit (ECU) program can be transmitted to an external device using a communication unit such as CAN. In addition, the fuel efficiency can be controlled by installing the fuel efficiency information on a vehicle by a device different from an electronic control unit (ECU) of the engine and displaying the fuel efficiency information on a body device or transmitting the fuel efficiency to the external device using the communication unit such as CAN.
[0041] In addition, in the present invention, an intake air flow meter, an oxygen concentration sensor to measure an excess air ratio during an exhaust, and a data collection/operation device are mounted on a vehicle including a vehicle speed sensor and an engine speed sensor. When the vehicle actually travels on a road surface, the vehicle speed (Vsd) and the engine speed obtained from the vehicle speed sensor and the engine speed sensor and outputs of the intake air flow meter and the oxygen concentration sensor are input to the data collection/operation device, a fuel consumption rate is calculated from the intake air flow and the oxygen ratio (RO) during the exhaust, a fuel consumption amount (fuel efficiency: FE) is calculated from the calculated fuel consumption rate and the vehicle speed, a fuel supply amount is calculated from the fuel consumption amount (fuel efficiency: FE) and the engine speed, an axial average effective pressure of the vehicle is calculated from a relation of the calculated fuel supply amount and the axial average effective pressure, and an engine output can be calculated using the calculated axial average effective pressure.